WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Green Party called on Democrats in the U.S. Senate not to reverse their defeat of fast-track trade authority for passage of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).

On Tuesday, May 12, Senate Democrats blocked passage of legislation to grant President Obama fast-track authority to promote the TPP, which Greens called a temporary victory for democracy and transparency.

"Intense pressure from advocates of fair trade, democracy, and environmental, public health, and labor protections led Democrats in the Senate to reject the first vote on fast track. The proposed legislative compromises are inadequate. It'll be a stinging betrayal if the same Democrats vote for a new fast-track bill, even with the new provision," said Jesse Townley, co-chair of the Green Party of the United States.

Green Party leaders said that the TPP must either be defeated or be extensively renegotiated and amended so that it strengthens protections for jobs, labor rights, small businesses and farms, the environment, and public health.

The TPP, which Obama Administration negotiated in secret with the help of 600 "trade advisers" from powerful multinational corporations, would establish a mechanism to override democratically enacted laws by handing over legislative and judicial power to a small panel of corporate lawyers. Sections of the deal leaked by Wikileaks confirm these dangers (see "Secret Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) - Environment Chapter," Wikileaks, January 15, 2014, https://wikileaks.org/tpp-enviro/pressrelease.html).

The Green Party has consistently opposed the TPP, as well as the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP). In 2012, Green presidential nominee Jill Stein warned about the TPP's dangers, while both President Obama and Republican nominee Mitt Romney supported the trade deal and avoided mentioning it in speeches and debates.

Greens compared the TPP to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), signed into law by President Clinton in December, 1993, which according to the AFL-CIO caused the outsourcing of 700,000 American manufacturing jobs to Mexico.

International trade authorities empowered under "free trade" pacts have allowed participating countries to challenge each others' local and national efforts to implement clean, renewable energy technologies and conservation programs and government subsidies for them, because such ventures violate free-trade rules and constitute illegal protectionism and trade discrimination.

Author Naomi Klein has documented how trade pacts and authorities like the World Trade Organization have obstructed programs and environmental laws that would lower CO2 emissions in many nations ("Hot Money," Chapter 2, pp. 64-95, in "This Changes Everything," 2014).